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Favorite short stories?

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-16 14:40

What are some of your favorite short stories? I need some good shit to read.

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-16 18:00

Stephen Kings are great, if you're into that sort of reading...

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-16 22:48

Some of my favorite short story collections:
—Strange Pilgrims by Gabriel García Márquez
—Ten Little Indians by Sherman Alexie
—Knockemstiff by Donald Ray Pollock

 But I've always liked Shirley Jackson and Flannery O'Connor's stuff.

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-17 3:42

I liked some of Karl Edward Wagner's Kane stuff a lot, namely those in Death Angel's Shadow.

Also, Fritz Leiber.

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-17 5:15

I like the Legends collections, specifically the Dunk & Egg stuff from GRRM.

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-17 18:19

As said above, Flannery O'Connor is a good place to start. "A Good Man is Hard to Find" is a great one.

Sherman Alexie again. Go read "Because My Father Always Said He Was the Only Indian Who Saw Jimi Hendrix Play 'The Star-Spangled Banner' at Woodstock".

Frank Chin is pretty awesome, check out "Railroad Standard Time".

"Theme of the Traitor and the Hero" by Jorge Luis Borges

If you want to go old school, read "Daisy Miller" by Henry James, though technically it's a novella.

If you're in the mood for feminism, Alice Walker's "Laurel" and Dorothy Allison's "Don't Tell Me You Don't Know".

"The Sky is Gray" - Earnest Gaines

"Happiness" - Bharati Mukherjee

That's all I have off the top of my head.

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-18 1:03

Cordwainer Smith's short stories are great.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-06 23:12

Everything's Eventual (short story collection by Stephen King) had some pretty great stories in it. Like 1408.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-07 1:05

>>8
I loved that collection. My favourite was The Man In The Black Suit (I think this is the title, it's been a while).

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-07 2:29

"Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" by Joyce Carol Oates.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-07 2:33

the last question, by isaac asimov. hands down the best science fiction short story ever written. plus, its got an ending that will blow minds.

prove me wrong: http://www.multivax.com/last_question.html (running time: 10min)

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-07 19:25

Saki. Dark, funny, suave.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-07 19:26

Saki's short stories.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-08 23:08

"The Naked Man" i forget the author :/

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-09 3:36

>>4
Holy shit. Someone recommending Karl Edward Wagner who isn't me? I tip my hat to you, sir. You have good and obscure tastes.

>>5
I second that. GRRM's short stories are very good, especially Sandkings.

You may also want to give "Looking for Jake" by China Mieville a shot. I just finished that today, and thought it was very good with the possible exception of the comic thrown in there.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-09 14:59

william gibson

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-09 15:06

>>16
fave

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-09 21:46

2BR02B - Vonnegut

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-10 18:17

I have two favorite short stories.
"The Whimper of Whipped Dogs" by Harlan Ellison
"A Perfect Day for Banana Fish" by J.D. Salinger

a few further recommended stories:

"I Have No Mouth And I Must Scream" -Ellison
"Just Before The War With The Eskimos" -Salinger
"Memorial Day" -Nadine Darling

check 'em out.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-15 19:55

Fire and Ice by Ray Bradbury is awesome.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-16 14:28

"A Study in Emerald" by Neil Gaiman
http://www.neilgaiman.com/p/Cool_Stuff/Short_Stories

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-16 14:32

>>21
And of course any of the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories.
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1661

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-16 14:33

>>21
And of course any of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories.
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1661

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-16 16:36

The Dandelion Girl, by Robert Franklin Young.

Day before yesterday I saw a rabbit, and yesterday a deer, and today, you.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-22 2:42

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-23 15:57

Bartleby the Scrivener, Herman Melville
There Will Come Soft Rains, Ray Bradbury

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-23 17:48

Animal Farm.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-24 18:23

>>27
Animal Farm is a bit too long to be a short story. I can see how you'd find it a bit too short to be a novel, though.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-25 0:18

Novelette.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-25 4:57

>>29

A novella, even.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-27 19:41

Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut
Johnny Mnemonic by William Gibson

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-27 21:43

>>30
A novelillo.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-27 22:48

under my novella-ella-ella

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-28 15:54

Victory Unintentional by Isaac Asimov

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-29 4:44

I quite like The Cask of Amontillado by Poe.

Name: Anonymous 2008-09-29 9:09

>>34
Back to gaia...

Name: Anonymous 2008-10-13 20:51

Bradbury's The Small Assassin.

Freaked me out first time I read it. Good thing I don't have kids.

Name: Anonymous 2008-10-13 23:33

His Father's Earth by Thomas Wolfe. Read it in a school literature book long ago. While everyone in my class forgot about it I took the textbook home and read it over and over and it brought a tear to my eye.

Now I want to read it again but I can't find it published ANYWHERE. Goddammit.

Name: Anonymous 2008-10-14 13:06

Anything by Katherine Mansfield, she's awesome, one of the finest prose stylists of the twentieth century. Bliss is one of her finest and is very short indeed, it's a good place to start.

 Somerset Maugham wrote some real gems. Rain is my favourite of his, and possibly my very favourite short story.

 Haruki Murakami writes some great short stories.

 Also I should mention Lovecraft, since nobody has yet. He's deeply flawed, but still well worth reading. I can't think of anyone else who has turned all their insecurity, hate and weakness into such an amazing end product and he's worth reading just for that.

Name: Anonymous 2008-10-15 16:56

Neil Gaiman's collections "Fragile things" and "Smoke and mirrors" are very good especially "Snow Glass Apples" and "How to talk to girls at parties"
http://www.neilgaiman.com/p/Cool_Stuff/Short_Stories/How_To_Talk_To_Girls_At_Parties

I'm also a big fan of Frank O'Connor, Stephen King, certain Anne McCaffrey short stories, Saki and any short story interstitial's from larger fiction series.

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